If TCJA expires, North Carolinians will pay the price
We need North Carolina’s leaders in Washington, DC, to do the right thing and secure these tax breaks for the long haul.
In Raleigh, as elsewhere, the contrast is clear: opposing is a breeze; building is the burden.
In a free-market economy, each transaction is a freely entered contract based upon information the seller provides. But what if they didn't bargain honestly?
Central planners promise to achieve comparable or better results without the “mess” of market economics. They are misleading at least themselves.
In North Carolina, manufacturing comprises over 13% of the state’s GDP and employs more than 467,000 North Carolinians — nearly 10% of our state’s workforce.
Like his predecessor, North Carolina's new governor attempts to hide a proposed tax hike behind misleading language.
As George W. Bush's national counsel during the 2000 Florida recount, I see echoes of Gore's playbook in Jefferson Griffin’s attempts to invalidate 60,000 North Carolina voters.
About the same time North Carolina leaders learned their representative body was dissolved, news of the battles of Lexington and Concord arrived in the colony.